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Nikon DSLR Cameras
D5300
Shot A, Shot B
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<blockquote data-quote="Bob Blaylock" data-source="post: 500338" data-attributes="member: 16749"><p>There definitely is something very odd going on here. The EXIF data for both pictures show identical shutter speed, aperture, and ISO settings, and that they were taken two seconds apart.</p><p></p><p> The only way that this seems possible, assuming no malfunction or otherwise unexpected and unaccounted behavior on the camera's part, would be for the light level to change significantly in those two seconds—something along the lines of there being a passing cloud that just happened to be blocking the Sun in the first short,and then cleared in the second.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Bob Blaylock, post: 500338, member: 16749"] There definitely is something very odd going on here. The EXIF data for both pictures show identical shutter speed, aperture, and ISO settings, and that they were taken two seconds apart. The only way that this seems possible, assuming no malfunction or otherwise unexpected and unaccounted behavior on the camera's part, would be for the light level to change significantly in those two seconds—something along the lines of there being a passing cloud that just happened to be blocking the Sun in the first short,and then cleared in the second. [/QUOTE]
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Nikon DSLR Cameras
D5300
Shot A, Shot B
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